You can't change your water...without changing your water.
If your tap water is pH 8.2 then it is likely pretty hard as well. Peat pellets, oak leaves etc aren't really going to do much because the water is likely highly buffered. I've never used water softening pillows and the like so can't comment.
What you need to do is dilute your hardness down with another water source such as RO or rain water.
I live in London and so my tap water is pretty hard and alkaline. I mix it with rainwater and then prefilter overnight with Polyfilter before doing a water change. I experimented with various ratios and have settled on a 3.75rain:1tap ratio which reduces my hardness down to GH6, KH4. I then find that the tank pH stabilises out at 6.8 with the aid of a few alder cones, oak leaves and a large catappa leaf.
I'm happy with this as it's in the range where my chili rasboras, nerite snails, pygmy corys and cherry shrimp are happy, and I don't want to go too soft as I am wary of risking a pH crash in water that has very little buffering capacity.
It's pretty easy for me to do with the small volumes I'm using for my two nano tanks, but no reason it couldn't be scaled up for larger volumes.
If your tap water is pH 8.2 then it is likely pretty hard as well. Peat pellets, oak leaves etc aren't really going to do much because the water is likely highly buffered. I've never used water softening pillows and the like so can't comment.
What you need to do is dilute your hardness down with another water source such as RO or rain water.
I live in London and so my tap water is pretty hard and alkaline. I mix it with rainwater and then prefilter overnight with Polyfilter before doing a water change. I experimented with various ratios and have settled on a 3.75rain:1tap ratio which reduces my hardness down to GH6, KH4. I then find that the tank pH stabilises out at 6.8 with the aid of a few alder cones, oak leaves and a large catappa leaf.
I'm happy with this as it's in the range where my chili rasboras, nerite snails, pygmy corys and cherry shrimp are happy, and I don't want to go too soft as I am wary of risking a pH crash in water that has very little buffering capacity.
It's pretty easy for me to do with the small volumes I'm using for my two nano tanks, but no reason it couldn't be scaled up for larger volumes.